Forget Bluetooth, new wireless technology uses your body to transmit data .


And it’s up to 10 million times more efficient.

Bluetooth redefines ubiquitous. It’s seemingly everywhere, and nowhere more so than in personal wearable devices such as fitness trackers, smart watches, audio headsets, earphones… you name it.

But what if it’s not the best technology for the job? Researchers at the University of California, San Diego in the US have developed a prototype to show off a new wireless communication technique which they say massively outperforms existing wireless tech by using the human body itself to help send data between devices.

The researchers call their new method “magnetic field human body communication”. The technique uses the body as a vehicle to deliver magnetic energy between wearable electronic gadgets. For the system to function and propagate magnetic fields through the body, the wearable device needs to be circular in nature (like the coil shown in the image above), meaning it could work for things like fitness bands, smart watches, headbands, or belts.

Why would we do this? The primary benefit is lower power consumption. Whereas Bluetooth devices worn on the body transmit data via radio signals, the electromagnetic radiation that makes up these signals is blocked by something – you. Yep, our bodies get in the way of the data transmissions, creating obstructions and resulting in ‘path loss’, which can only be circumvented by boosting the device’s power.

The end result is that Bluetooth devices aren’t very power efficient when we wear them – something you’re more than likely to have had personal experience with – and it’s a problem that’s only compounded by the fact that most wearable Bluetooth gadgets are small and light, meaning they only have very small batteries in the first place.

By sending data via magnetic fields directly through our bodies, however, path loss can be cut down by a huge amount. The researchers say path loss using magnetic field human body communication is more than 10 million times lower than that of Bluetooth radios.

“This technique, to our knowledge, achieves the lowest path losses out of any wireless human body communication system that’s been demonstrated so far,” said Patrick Mercier, lead author of the study, in a statement. “This technique will allow us to build much lower power wearable devices.”

If you’re concerned about whether sending magnetic energy through your body is a good idea, the researchers say you have nothing to worry about. They say that ultra-low-power communication systems in wearable devices will transmit signals of much less power than things like MRI scanners and wireless implant devices, with magnetic fields passing freely and harmlessly through biological tissue.

Another advantage of the technology could be security. Compared to something like Bluetooth, which transmits data in a wide radius of several metres, magnetic field human body communication prevents any kind of digital eavesdropping, as the signals are largely contained to your body. The researchers say information is neither radiated off your body, nor can it be transmitted from one person to another.

While this means the method won’t be suitable for sending data from wearable devices to remote gadgets (such as audio speakers or a computer), for personalised applications, some people may find the limitation is actually a positive. “Increased privacy is desirable when you’re using your wearable devices to transmit information about your health,” said Jiwoong Park, first author of the study.

Bluetooth group ushers in updated Bluetooth 4.1.


The Bluetooth Special Interest Group (SIG), the regulatory body responsible for the standard, announced on Wednesday its release of an updated version of the specification, Bluetooth 4.1. This is the first new update to the standard in nearly four years. Bluetooth has become a familiar and fundamental word in the vocabulary of device interconnectedness and “Internet of Things,” as the technology standard that enables information exchange between wireless devices. Announced by the Bluetooth Special Interest Group, Bluetooth 4.1 brings improvements, enablements, and developer support benefits. Also on Wednesday, Suke Jawanda, Bluetooth SIG chief marketing officer , blogged “Improving Usability extends the brand promise to consumers with an ‘it just works’ experience. This spec is engineered with several new features to make it work seamlessly with popular cell technologies like LTE, maintain connections with less frequent manual reconnection, and deliver a more efficient data exchange.”

For device users, Bluetooth 4.1 will show improvements in the form of easier connections. Devices can reconnect automatically when in proximity of one another. The user leaves the room and come back to find the two devices that were recently used reconnected without any intervention.

Device users can also expect improved data transfer. Data-gathering sensors in devices while on a bike ride, run, or swim, will transfer that data more efficiently when the consumer returns home.

For developers, Bluetooth 4.1 will support Bluetooth Smart products and solutions with “dual-mode topology” and “link-layer topology” software features. What that means is that application developers as well as product developers can think about creating products that take on multiple roles. With 4.1, one can think about behavior as a Bluetooth Smart peripheral and also as a Bluetooth Smart hub. A smart watch can behave as a data-gathering information from a heart rate monitor, but at the same time behave as a peripheral to a smartphone, showing notifications from the phone. According to SIG, “As the Bluetooth Smart ecosystem grows, the Bluetooth SIG expects more solutions to play both a hub and peripheral role. Bluetooth 4.1 delivers this type of flexibility to Bluetooth Smart devices and application developers.”

The group regards the new update as “an important evolutionary update to the wireless standard.” The last update in 2010 was instead considered as a revolutionary update in the introduction of Bluetooth Smart (Low Energy) technology. “Bluetooth Smart technology put us on a rocket ship of growth, with Bluetooth annual product shipment projections skyrocketing to more than 4.5 billion in the next five years,” said Jawanda.

To be sure, the standard for wireless interconnections has become a major presence in devices and services used every day. The Bluetooth SIG, a trade association, now counts over 20,000 member companies and oversees the development of Bluetooth specifications, and promotion and protection of the Bluetooth brand.

 

Modular Robotics.


Fifteen years ago, Lego released the Mindstorms Robotics Invention System, and amateur roboticists went wild. With it, they could snap together motorized creations that they could program with an intelligent brick. Since then, the Mindstorms online community has shared more than 17,000 designs—as varied as automatic toilet flushers and bumper cars—and started robotics leagues and engineering curriculums. This summer, Lego will release the EV3, the first Mindstorms update in seven years. The kit will allow builders to create tens of thousands of new robots, all of which will be smarter, faster, and more responsive than before.

1) INTELLIGENCE UPGRADE

The heart of the EV3 is an upgraded processing brick. A 300-megahertz processor runs up to 10 times faster than its predecessor, so the brick can control more appendages and monitor more sensors at once. The system also has 64 megabytes of RAM to boost response time and 16 megabytes of storage.

2) SENSOR SUITE

EV3 robots can navigate autonomously. Designers embedded an infrared proximity sensor in the eyes, so robots can follow, attack, or run from what they encounter. Users will be able to buy additional bricks with gyroscopes, which will enable the robot to balance itself.

3) FASTER MOTORS

Each kit comes with three motors. Two large ones transfer their 170 rpms to double-sided output drives; each motor can move pairs of legs, arms, or tentacles independently of one another. The third, smaller motor spins at 250 rpm and handles minute actions, such as firing ammo or flicking fingers.

4) WIRELESS CONTROL

A Bluetooth radio on the processing brick’s circuit board lets builders control and program their robots through an iOS or Android app. They can also connect a Wi-Fi radio via a USB port on the processing brick; with a robot linked to a router, it’s accessible from anywhere.

5) EXPANSION-READY

For massive, complicated creations, builders can daisy-chain up to four processing bricks together. A “master” brick sends commands to the other three bricks that rely on it and relays instructions to extremities, such as a command to pinch together a thumb and forefinger.